Marijuana could revive abandoned Canadian chocolate factory

OTTAWA — An abandoned factory once owned by the Hershey Co. in Canada may soon make products that offer a bigger buzz than a chocolate kiss: marijuana, under license by the government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Bruce Linton, chairman of Tweed Inc. — one of 185 companies seeking a permit to start producing pot in Canada next year — said finding a location was one of his biggest obstacles because landlords shun even sanctioned drug production.

Canada's health department in June said it would end a system allowing people to grow medicinal pot in their homes and instead have companies supply the drug. The image of pot factories represents a shift for Harper, who says he never smoked marijuana and who has campaigned on being tough on crime.

The licensing of output is a "tightening up versus loosening up" of drug laws because it separates "the legitimate from the illicit use," said Mark Mander, chairman of a drug panel for the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police and head of police in Kentville, Nova Scotia.

Home-grown pot has led to "unintended consequences" that hurt public safety and led to people abusing the system, Health Canada said in June when it published rules. The new system regulates marijuana like other narcotics, according to a background paper that says commercial producers must meet strict requirements to be licensed.

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Medical doctors object to the new system, saying there are no standardized dosages or rules to make marijuana safe to prescribe like other drugs. "We have to make absolutely sure we aren't creating a nation of addicts," said Canadian Medical Association President Louis Hugo Francescutti. "Very few physicians are prepared."

Many Canadians are deciding marijuana is good medicine, with more than 30,000 people now having medical licenses. Sales could reach $1.25 billion by 2024, Health Canada estimates.

Smiths Falls Mayor Dennis Staples said he's heard only two complaints about the project and the city council is "totally supportive" of it. Tweed will bring employment to the city of 9,000 people about 80 kilometers (50 miles) southwest of Ottawa, which lost 1,700 jobs in recent years — including those at the old Hershey plant.

The mayor has a personal connection to the issue: His brother used medical marijuana as he battled colon cancer. "It made his last days on this Earth much more bearable," Staples said.

"We no longer own the building," said Hershey spokesman Jeff Beckman in an email. "We are no longer connected to the facility." The old factory had made products such as Chipits chocolate chips, Cherry Blossoms and chocolate bars.

The site has the advantage of being across the street from the local police station, said Linton, who also serves on the boards of engineering firm Clearford Industries Inc. and environmental technology firm Thermal Energy International, both headquartered in the Ottawa area. Linton is also Canada's representative on a World Bank water sanitation panel.

Canada's plan for secure, large-scale sanctioned production may be emulated by other countries, he said.

"This government made a good decision. They said we are going to make it such that this stuff isn't growing in 36,000 houses, but rather in a controlled structured way," he said.

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